82 i r '" ;$ ,,/ .,,> STYS UMY NGER ENGUSH LEATHER LIME N ,. .' -:-:,.:. ,. "t: .. ' ...... : ,alisfi tuther,: G*J ' .. ".- -... .....-;: ";..'.{ '"', "..; , "' .. ..,.. ,.ë;<...- . . w ....;. .:. ..;. ,'. . ..' . .... . . ," :;.". . . . - . . ,- .. . . . ....-. - '. . .. ... . qtiØbÓRAN 1 :' 11Gt(:; :rW . .::.9.F '. . ?t . Ä . ." ' ,>" The fasting time scent in a shower soap with its own convenient cord-and deodorant for 24-hour protection. Shower soap on a cord $2. Handy stick deodorant $1.25. ConvenÎent Aerosol $1.25. PRODUCTS OF THE MEM COMPANY, tNC , NORTHVAlE. N J. 07647 'I I< '!:.*'t f j. .'*- ,^, ",< '" m { . : '::::. 1 ;f' A .p. ..-:? ;.'\., . .' v/ -- i\ <r- . v- >. .. "'^ . . Sea Legs. By Surf Line- Hawaii .# . , /'- , Polyester / cotton by Galey & Lord, 1407 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10018, a division of Burlington Industriesa '. .-,/!, "o(' "<<";, ,dit;i;. , .' . : + ,Y. ,\";.y' u:: .,:'. ., u '> >. " \ Y '<<. <t." 4. . .. . . .;' 5' " . :' ',<. '"/ '"1-1 :";" --: '< , . it. . ::t . , ..... ./ : 's;. ; 4 # M $''' ...... , '';: """. R "" -.."""'" --- - -- .. ..--,.,- , N þ \ easy 111dnagelnent One of the ) oung victors blamed the eneIny for tlus state of affdirs "Whdt else could we do?" he asked Ine rhetorically. "The Arabs Inobilized and we had to win." Sounding a sÏtnilar note, Colonel \1or- dechai Bar-On, chief education officer of Israel's arIned forces, Wh0111 I saw at his headquarters in Tel Aviv, point- ed to a wall lnap that showed how sInaH Israel would be today if the _Arabs had agreed to go along with the 1947 United Nations plan for the partition- ing of Palestine. "Even if we could al- ways aSSUIne victory, there is a ]Ïtnit to what one can WIn exclusively through war," Colonel Bar-()n observed. "The possibilIties that go with peace, how- ever, are unlÏtnited, and we know very well that we can realize our most fruit- ful future only by living peaceful1y with the Arabs. We will not tolerate their aggression, but they are our neighbors, livIng within our borders and a11 around us." Both the Sabras and the Hitler- era ÏtnInigrants, having defended their young nation, sÏtnply want to get on with developing it further. For Inost of theIn, this was the Ineaning of the war, and they are irked hecause people out- side Israel deplore the fact that Israel has) et to return any captured land. To the disappointed outsiders, this ap- parently represents a Inoral failure. To Israelis, who faced the possibi1îtv of an- other Holocaust, the faultfinding seelns downright patronizing. .,i\. Hungdrian Ï1nIl1igrant in Ashkelon told Ine, "Peo- ple have become used to being Inoral over our dead hodies. 'T'he 111inutc we Jews start to behave like dnYOl1L else, they think we have ceased to be 'chosen' -'chosen' to keep tht>ir halos in place." Here in J erusaleln, MaJ or l""'eddy Kollek suggested that Jews Inay owe their reputation for being highly Inoralistic to the fact that they ha ve for so long had to be alert at distinguishing between Ineans and ends, because they have had to be on their guard concerning the other fellow's intentions. ForIner PrÏtne Minister David Ben-Gurion, dt his kibbutz in the Negev, stressed the point that a certain percentage of the disappointed outsiders are Jews. Like the Israelis, he suggested, they Iliay be finding it difficult to cope with victory. The elder statesInan, in contrast to 1110St of his countrymen, is neithel surprised nor nettled by this particular criticisIn froIn Jews abroad, even though its tone is apt to he IDore acerhic than that of equally irate non- J eWS a Recently, he recalled, he had felt hIS blood pressure Inounting as he began to read a letter